Thursday, 31 July 2008

We have a curious relationship with these paper hot air balloons. We usually have some in Reception, but otherwise buy them in bulk from a small shop in Maenam, but they're also available in the village. A Taiwanese guest once told me that they were invented thousands of years ago in China, as a means of signaling from one village to the next. Here they're lit for the spectacle, especially at Loy Kratong and New Year.

I can't recall how we came to start writing messages on the balloons to our dead relatives and friends, but it's not something we would have dreamed up for ourselves. I think the practice might be routed in the animist tradition of ancestor worship, otherwise manifested in daily Thai life through the Spirit Houses that are evident outside many Thai homes and businesses (see next entry) including Baan Bophut.

However it started, it's become something of a family tradition to remember departed relatives and friends. It's good to make time to remember happy times with those to whom we were close and it doesn't do any harm - so long as they're kept away from the thatched roof of the bar.

Be among the first to share your experience of Baan Bophut: CLICK LOGO

Become our friend...

View 360 degree external shots of Baan Bophut Beach Hotel

Escape - Relax - Revitalize

Baan Bophut Beach Hotel Fisherman's Village, Koh Samui

Revive - Renew - Restore

Welcome! To Thailand, Koh Samui and the views of the Hotel Family Holt

Random observations and opinions about Thailand, Koh Samui and the Fisherman's Village of Bophut.In particular it's about our small, beautiful, beach hotel - Baan Bophut - providing a narrative with more information for our guests and visitors to the island, than we can comfortably fit on the hotel's website